Quantifying and Monitoring Potential Ecosystem Impacts of Geological Carbon Storage

Lead Research Organisation: British Geological Survey
Department Name: Energy & Marine Geoscience

Abstract

Proposal to Research Councils Energy Program: Carbon Capture and Storage / Potential ecosystem impacts of geological carbon storage call. Quantifying and Monitoring Potential Ecosystem Impacts of Geological Carbon Storage (QICS). Climate change caused by increasing emissions of CO2, principally the burning of fossil fuels for power generation, is one of the most pressing concerns for society. Currently around 90% of the UK's energy needs are met by fossil fuels which will probably continue to be the predominant source of energy for decades to come. Developing our understanding of the pros and cons of a range of strategies designed to reduce CO2 emissions is vital. Of the available strategies such as wind, wave and solar renewables and Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) none are without potential problems or limitations. The concept of CCS simply put is to capture CO2 during the process of power generation and to store it permanently in deep geological structures beneath the land or sea surface. If CCS is successful existing fossil fuel reserves could be used whilst new forms of power generation with low CO2 emissions are developed. A few projects have been successfully demonstrating either capture or storage on limited scales, so it is established that the technical challenges are surmountable. Research is also demonstrating that the geological structures are in general robust for long term storage (for example oil deposits remain in place within geological strata). However geological structures are complex and natural sub surface gas deposits are known to outgas at the surface. Consequently it would be irresponsible to develop full scale CCS programmes without an understanding of the likelihood of leakage and the severity of impacts which might occur. The aim of this proposal is to greatly improve the understanding of the scale of impact a leakage from CCS systems might inflict on the ecosystem and to enable a comprehensive risk assessment of CCS. The main location of stored CO2 in the UK will be in geo-formations under the North Sea and our research concentrates on impacts to the marine environment, although our work will also be relevant to all geological formations. Research to date has shown that hypothetical large leaks would significantly alter sediment and water chemistry and consequently some marine creatures would be vulnerable. What is not yet understood is how resilient species are, and how big an impact would stem from a given leak. Our project will investigate for the first time the response of a real marine community (both within and above the sediments) to a small scale tightly controlled artificial leak. We will look at chemical and biological effects and importantly investigate the recovery time needed. We will be able to relate the footprint of the impact to the known input rate of CO2. The results will allow us to develop and test models of flow and impact that can be applied to other scenarios and we will assess a number of monitoring methods. The project will also investigate the nature of flow through geological formations to give us an understanding of the spread of a rising CO2 plume should it breach the reservoir. The work proposed here would amount to a significant advance in the understanding and scientific tools necessary to form CCS risk assessments and quantitative knowledge of the ecological impacts of leaks. We will develop model tools that can predict the transfer, fate and impact of leaks from reservoir to ecosystem, which may be applied when specific CCS operations are planned. An important product of our work will be a recommendation of the best monitoring strategy to ensure the early detection of leaks. We will work alongside interested parties from industry, government and public to ensure that the information we produce is accessible and effective.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Measurement of the response in unconsolidated sediment of the presence of a known quantity of CO2 by a series of shallow geophysical surveys.
The impact on microbial activity of high CO2 levels immediately below the sea bed.
Best practice for onshore-offshore directional drilling beneath the sea bed guided by a 3D geological model of marine sediment and bedrock.
Review of submarine CO2 flux rates from natural analogue sites of CO2 escape.
Exploitation Route Demonstration of techniques for the quantification of the volume of CO2 gas and dissolved CO2 from geophysical survey data without requiring costly sea bed sampling for emissions monitoring and emissions trading.
Cost-effective development of marine survey techniques to prove integrity of a CO2 storage site.
Cost-effective methods to focus costly sea bed monitoring techniques for monitoring an offshore storage site.
Sectors Energy,Environment

URL http://www.bgs.ac.uk/qics/reports.html
 
Description Demonstrated the environmental impact and recovery of an escape of CO2 from a geological storage site by a submarine controlled release of CO2. Determined the physical and chemical processes of the passage of CO2 below, above and at the sea bed. Informed the planning and policy for environmental monitoring of demonstrator CO2 storage sites. Allayed concerns of an adverse impact on the environment of an escape of CO2 at the scale of the QICS experimental release. Project findings are regarded as a benchmark against which environmental impact of CCS, other research and industry projects are compared. QICS data and site are the subject of additional research proposals to examine and test the environmental and physical impact of exposure to CO2.
First Year Of Impact 2013
Sector Energy,Environment
Impact Types Economic

 
Title QICS data: CO2 Storage Data Centre 
Description Contribution of the UK QICS survey data, accessible via the UK CCS Research Centre data archive, to the CO2 Storage Data Consortium (CSDC). CSDC is an international network being established to promote sharing of reference datasets from pioneering CO2 storage projects. The purpose is to accelerate building of competence, reduce costs, and minimize uncertainties associated with CO2 storage. The consortium is led by Norway (SINTEF Petroleum Research) and the USA. Volunteer participation of the QICS survey datasets gives a UK presence in the consortium. UK participation was highlighted by an invitation to contribute as a presenter to the launch of the consortium at the Greenhouse Gas Technologies conference in Lausanne, Switzerland, 16 November 2016. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2015 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact Web enquiry statistics for the UK CCS RC Data Archive showed a sharp peak of enquiry and interest after presentation of the QICS project results at the international conference 
URL http://www.sintef.no/en/sintef-petroleum-research/csdc2016/
 
Title QICS data: UK CCS RC Data and Information Archive 
Description Metadata and data for thirty two datasets are available from the QICS project from the UK CCS Research Centre Data and Information Archive. The datasets include microbial, sediment and water biochemistry, seismic reflection, multi-beam bathymetry, macrofaunal gene expression and bubble measurement data and publications. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2014 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact The data from the QICS project is freely available for download after an embargo period to permit publication by the originators. The embargo period is usually two years. Metadata is included for datasets that are both already available and under embargo. 
URL https://www.bgs.ac.uk/ukccs/dataset.cfm?id=19542754
 
Description Engaging and promoting international collaboration 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Initiated and led a workshop in September 2015 to introduce project findings to international industry and practitioners to collaborate with an operational project in Canada and planned project in China.

Initiated, led and organised an international research collaboration workshop in March 2016, attended by 72 participants from 14 countries representing 18 research projects and industry stakeholders at which the project findings were promoted for future research collaboration
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2012,2015,2016
 
Description Inclusion of QICS project datasets in an international CO2 Storage Data Consortium project at major international CCS conference (GHGT-13) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact QICS project seismic survey datasets volunteered to enable participation of the UK in an international (Norway and USA) data sharing consortium. The participation of the UK and the QICS project data was highlighted by an invited presentation at the formal launch of the CO2 Storage Data Consortium at the Greenhouse Gas Technologies biennial conference, to a worldwide audience, on 16 November 2016 in Lausanne, Switzerland.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2016
 
Description QICS final conference 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact Presented the scientific results to governmental policy makers and industry and discussed the findings and implications to environmental monitoring of an offshore CO2 storage site.

The QICS project, scientific research, findings and implications to storage site monitoring was made known to a very wider group of stakeholders (two prospective site operators, regulators, Scottish and UK government, environmental consultants and offshore monitoring companies).
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2014
URL http://www.bgs.ac.uk/qics/invitation.html?submit=QICS+final+conference+8th+May+2014
 
Description QICS stakeholder engagement 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Invited participation by industry, government, regulators, local planners, non-governmental organisation representatives to form a Stakeholder Advisory Panel to share information on the project, inform decisions from discussion, advise of progress and advise of emerging findings.

Project scientists were guided on stakeholder perception and took advice on measurement of impact of local public awareness activities. Stakeholders were made aware of the project, were reassured activities were planned to anticipate and mitigate risk of an adverse impact and that the project controlled release of CO2 was conducted in a safe and careful manner.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2011,2012,2013
URL http://www.bgs.ac.uk/qics/stakeholders.html